Re: Facebook Co-Founder Saverin Gives Up U.S. Citizenship Before IPO
dcarrigg, thanks for the post. I was unaware of those Singaporean "traditions".
I can see from some of the posts here that the Saverin story, like the Travon Martin case, stirs up many more issues than the mere subject of taxing ex-pats on their way out the door. To those who defend his tax-avoiding actions in the name of individual liberty, here is my response to Joel Bowman's piece yesterday in the Daily Reckoning. As you can see, Mr. Bowman's fawning over Saverin (the title of his piece was "Run, Saverin, Run!) in the name of libertarian purity was just a little too much for me to bear when he concluded that "all taxes are theft". Here is my take on that particularly ludicrous notion:
Joel:
I'm as much a free market fan as you claim to be, but I view the Saverin story a little differently than apparently you do.
I see a man who would have produced nothing in his home country of Brazil. Indeed, by his own admission when he applied for U.S. citizenship, he was high on a list of rich kids targeted for kidnapping and was not expected to survive in one piece if we did not grant his request.
Somehow, and far ahead of a list of good people wanting to be America's next entrepreneur, he was granted not only American citizenship but also admission to Harvard, where he met many bright and like-minded sons and daughters of America's richest and most privileged families. When an opportunity to invest came along, his family wealth allowed him to purchase a ground floor interest in Facebook that, through the hard work, dedication and bright ideas of many other young Americans, made him a billionaire.
By our nation's rules, every penny of that is rightfully Saverin's. By the same token, though, and by those same rules, every penny of that gain is taxable. Saverin wants to play for the former rules and ignore the latter.
Rules are rules, Joel, and you don't get to pick and choose which ones you follow and which ones you don't. Advocate all you want to change the rules, but until those rules change, Saverin's gains are not yours or mine to claim and the taxes on those gains are not theft.
Yes, I highlight that because it is one of your favorite --- and most outrageous -- sayings. Don't you see what folly you invite when make such a statement? Don't you see that when you call tax laws "theft", then others will call Saverin's earnings their own? Don't you see that when you cannonize a common ingrate like Saverin just to make a rhetorical point, you invite the Robin Hood fans to start looking for a hero of their own?
I have noticed you often lament about the "decline" of America. As your youthful photo suggests that neither you nor your father were actively involved in WWII or its immediate aftermath, perhaps you might learn a little from examining more closely that earlier America you long for. This was an America inhabited by our "Greatest Generation", men and women who had every justification for lowering their taxes immediately after VE day in 1946. After all, if they saved the free world, who would have blamed them if they had done just that? But they didn't. In fact, they did the opposite. They raised the marginal tax rate to 91% so that their war debts --- the debts paid in money, rather than in blood --- would not be passed on to their children. Within a decade, they accomplished that mission, setting the stage for their children --- the Boomers --- to prosper like no other previous generation had prospered in the history of the world.
You see, Joel, that Greatest Generation did not view taxes as theft. They had witnessed hell on earth, and viewed those taxes as an entirely reasonable cost of ensuring a much better world for their children. Nor were these 91% tax rates (as opposed to the 20% that so frightens your and Saverin) imposed by "liberals" or Democrats. They were imposed during a Republican administration and approved by President Eisenhower -- the same Eisenhower who encourage Americans not to run from taxes, but to actively participate in our democracy to ensure those precious revenues were not wasted.
Today, you devoted your considerable talent to praising another kind of man altogether. A man who made billions of dollars exploiting the basic human need for community and then ran away to an island so he could be left all alone. If that is the legacy you wish to leave your children, so be it. But just who do you think will be left in America to pay the bills of civilization that you are encouraging --- nay, cheering ---Saverin and others to run from? Who will be left to stand in the public square to rail against the coming tide of anger that the fleeing Saverins of the world have unleashed? I am certain you won't be, but I and my children will --- and we will never forgive you and other cowards for having incited, instead of reasoned with, the vast majority of Americans who are decent, hard working men and women not at all looking for handouts or a piece of Saverin's wealth. They are simply shocked that a man so fortunate to have lived here would not choose to stay and participate in the community he so richly exploited.
From your writings, Joel, I know you feel that America is a sinking ship. I do not at all agree. At last count, we have hundreds if not thousands of Steven Jobs and Mark Cubans. But even if your worst fears come true, Saverin is no better than the wealthy cads who jumped off the Titanic onto the last lifeboats ahead of women, children and the less socially connected ---and then claimed hero status when they landed safely ashore. And you are nothing but a mouthpiece for such men.
Next time, try finding some real heroes in America to write about. There are millions of us if you just look around.
dcarrigg, thanks for the post. I was unaware of those Singaporean "traditions".
I can see from some of the posts here that the Saverin story, like the Travon Martin case, stirs up many more issues than the mere subject of taxing ex-pats on their way out the door. To those who defend his tax-avoiding actions in the name of individual liberty, here is my response to Joel Bowman's piece yesterday in the Daily Reckoning. As you can see, Mr. Bowman's fawning over Saverin (the title of his piece was "Run, Saverin, Run!) in the name of libertarian purity was just a little too much for me to bear when he concluded that "all taxes are theft". Here is my take on that particularly ludicrous notion:
Joel:
I'm as much a free market fan as you claim to be, but I view the Saverin story a little differently than apparently you do.
I see a man who would have produced nothing in his home country of Brazil. Indeed, by his own admission when he applied for U.S. citizenship, he was high on a list of rich kids targeted for kidnapping and was not expected to survive in one piece if we did not grant his request.
Somehow, and far ahead of a list of good people wanting to be America's next entrepreneur, he was granted not only American citizenship but also admission to Harvard, where he met many bright and like-minded sons and daughters of America's richest and most privileged families. When an opportunity to invest came along, his family wealth allowed him to purchase a ground floor interest in Facebook that, through the hard work, dedication and bright ideas of many other young Americans, made him a billionaire.
By our nation's rules, every penny of that is rightfully Saverin's. By the same token, though, and by those same rules, every penny of that gain is taxable. Saverin wants to play for the former rules and ignore the latter.
Rules are rules, Joel, and you don't get to pick and choose which ones you follow and which ones you don't. Advocate all you want to change the rules, but until those rules change, Saverin's gains are not yours or mine to claim and the taxes on those gains are not theft.
Yes, I highlight that because it is one of your favorite --- and most outrageous -- sayings. Don't you see what folly you invite when make such a statement? Don't you see that when you call tax laws "theft", then others will call Saverin's earnings their own? Don't you see that when you cannonize a common ingrate like Saverin just to make a rhetorical point, you invite the Robin Hood fans to start looking for a hero of their own?
I have noticed you often lament about the "decline" of America. As your youthful photo suggests that neither you nor your father were actively involved in WWII or its immediate aftermath, perhaps you might learn a little from examining more closely that earlier America you long for. This was an America inhabited by our "Greatest Generation", men and women who had every justification for lowering their taxes immediately after VE day in 1946. After all, if they saved the free world, who would have blamed them if they had done just that? But they didn't. In fact, they did the opposite. They raised the marginal tax rate to 91% so that their war debts --- the debts paid in money, rather than in blood --- would not be passed on to their children. Within a decade, they accomplished that mission, setting the stage for their children --- the Boomers --- to prosper like no other previous generation had prospered in the history of the world.
You see, Joel, that Greatest Generation did not view taxes as theft. They had witnessed hell on earth, and viewed those taxes as an entirely reasonable cost of ensuring a much better world for their children. Nor were these 91% tax rates (as opposed to the 20% that so frightens your and Saverin) imposed by "liberals" or Democrats. They were imposed during a Republican administration and approved by President Eisenhower -- the same Eisenhower who encourage Americans not to run from taxes, but to actively participate in our democracy to ensure those precious revenues were not wasted.
Today, you devoted your considerable talent to praising another kind of man altogether. A man who made billions of dollars exploiting the basic human need for community and then ran away to an island so he could be left all alone. If that is the legacy you wish to leave your children, so be it. But just who do you think will be left in America to pay the bills of civilization that you are encouraging --- nay, cheering ---Saverin and others to run from? Who will be left to stand in the public square to rail against the coming tide of anger that the fleeing Saverins of the world have unleashed? I am certain you won't be, but I and my children will --- and we will never forgive you and other cowards for having incited, instead of reasoned with, the vast majority of Americans who are decent, hard working men and women not at all looking for handouts or a piece of Saverin's wealth. They are simply shocked that a man so fortunate to have lived here would not choose to stay and participate in the community he so richly exploited.
From your writings, Joel, I know you feel that America is a sinking ship. I do not at all agree. At last count, we have hundreds if not thousands of Steven Jobs and Mark Cubans. But even if your worst fears come true, Saverin is no better than the wealthy cads who jumped off the Titanic onto the last lifeboats ahead of women, children and the less socially connected ---and then claimed hero status when they landed safely ashore. And you are nothing but a mouthpiece for such men.
Next time, try finding some real heroes in America to write about. There are millions of us if you just look around.
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